Giter VIP home page Giter VIP logo

spock-reports's Introduction

Spock Reports Extension

by Renato Athaydes

Check out the latest news about this project!

What it is

This project is a global extension for Spock to create test (or, in Spock terms, Specifications) reports.

By default, the report creator generates a HTML report for each Specification, as well as a summary of all Specifications that have been run (index.html).

If you prefer to have your own template to generate reports from, you can use the TemplateReportCreator. This allows you to generate reports in any text format. See the "Using template reports" section below.

Where to find demo reports

I am using CodePen to design the HTML feature report, which contains detailed information about each Specification run by Spock, including the examples given (Where block) and their results, if any, and the summary report, which summarizes the results of all Specification runs. Click on the links to see the reports used for testing.

If you don't like the styles, you can use your own css stylesheets (see the customization section below). I welcome feedback on how to improve the report looks!

How to use it

To enable this Spock extension, you only need to declare a dependency to it (if using Maven, Ivy, Gradle etc) or, in other words, add the jar to the classpath.

In Maven:

Enable the JCenter repository:

    <repository>
      <id>jcenter</id>
      <name>JCenter Repo</name>
      <url>http://jcenter.bintray.com</url>
    </repository>

Add spock-reports to your <dependencies>:

<dependency>
  <groupId>com.athaydes</groupId>
  <artifactId>spock-reports</artifactId>
  <version>1.2.5</version>
  <scope>test</scope>
</dependency>

In Gradle:

repositories {
  jcenter()
}

dependencies {
    testCompile 'com.athaydes:spock-reports:1.2.5'
}

If you prefer, you can just download the jar directly from JCenter.

The only dependencies of this project are on Groovy (version 2.0+) and Spock, but if you're using Spock (version 0.7-groovy-2.0+), you'll already have both!

Customizing the reports

You can provide custom configuration in a properties file located at the following location (relative to the classpath):

META-INF/services/com.athaydes.spockframework.report.IReportCreator.properties

If you use Grails, the above location will not work... the correct location depends on the Grails version you're using. See the following blog posts by @rdmueller for instructions:

Here's the default properties file:

# Name of the implementation class of the report creator
# Currently supported classes are:
#   1. com.athaydes.spockframework.report.internal.HtmlReportCreator
#   2. com.athaydes.spockframework.report.template.TemplateReportCreator
com.athaydes.spockframework.report.IReportCreator=com.athaydes.spockframework.report.internal.HtmlReportCreator

# Set properties of the report creator
# For the HtmlReportCreator, the only properties available are
# (the location of the css files is relative to the classpath):
com.athaydes.spockframework.report.internal.HtmlReportCreator.featureReportCss=spock-feature-report.css
com.athaydes.spockframework.report.internal.HtmlReportCreator.summaryReportCss=spock-summary-report.css
# exclude Specs Table of Contents
com.athaydes.spockframework.report.internal.HtmlReportCreator.excludeToc=false

# Output directory (where the spock reports will be created) - relative to working directory
com.athaydes.spockframework.report.outputDir=build/spock-reports

# If set to true, hides blocks which do not have any description
com.athaydes.spockframework.report.hideEmptyBlocks=false

Notice that the location of the css file is relative to the classpath! That means that you have the freedom to place the css files in a separate jar, for example.

The output directory, on the other hand, is relative to the working directory. For Maven projects which use the defaults, you might want to change it to target/spock-reports.

System properties overrides

The following configuration options can also be overridden by system properties. These system properties must be set prior to Spock being initialized (which starts this extension). So you must ensure to set these properties as either JVM arguments or in your own bootstrapping function that in guaranteed to execute before Spock is initialized. When set before Spock is initialied, these system properties will take precedence over values read from config files. If Spock is initialized before these properties are set then they will have no effect.

com.athaydes.spockframework.report.IReportCreator: Set the report creator class to use. com.athaydes.spockframework.report.outputDir: Set the output directory of the generated reports; relative paths are relative to the working directory. com.athaydes.spockframework.report.hideEmptyBlocks: true|false; should blocks with empty text be printed out in report?

Default values are inherited from those described above.

Using template reports

If you don't like the looks of the HTML report or want your reports in a different text format, you can use the TemplateReportCreator to do that.

All you need to do to get started is provide a config file, as explained above, setting the IReportCreator to com.athaydes.spockframework.report.template.TemplateReportCreator:

com.athaydes.spockframework.report.IReportCreator=com.athaydes.spockframework.report.template.TemplateReportCreator

# Set properties of the report creator
com.athaydes.spockframework.report.template.TemplateReportCreator.specTemplateFile=/templateReportCreator/spec-template.md
com.athaydes.spockframework.report.template.TemplateReportCreator.reportFileExtension=md
com.athaydes.spockframework.report.template.TemplateReportCreator.summaryTemplateFile=/templateReportCreator/summary-template.md
com.athaydes.spockframework.report.template.TemplateReportCreator.summaryFileName=summary.md

# Output directory (where the spock reports will be created) - relative to working directory
com.athaydes.spockframework.report.outputDir=build/spock-reports

# If set to true, hides blocks which do not have any description
com.athaydes.spockframework.report.hideEmptyBlocks=false

Just copy the above contents to a file at META-INF/services/com.athaydes.spockframework.report.IReportCreator.properties relative to the classpath (eg. in src/test/resources for Maven users) and spock-reports will create a MD (mark-down) report for your tests.

To provide your own template, change the location of the template files, the file extension you wish your reports to have, and the name for the summary report file, using the config file.

To get started with your own template, check the existing spec template file and the summary template.

You can see an example report created with the default spec template file here (this is actually used in the spock-reports tests).

How templates work

The template report creator uses Groovy's GStringTemplateEngine to create reports based on a template file.

This template mechanism is very simple to use, but also very powerful, as you can write any code you want in the template file.

There are two templates you should provide:

  • Spec report template: report for the run of a single Specification.
  • Summary template: contains a summary of all Specifications that have been run during a JVM lifetime.

Spec report template

Here's the most basic Spec template you could imagine, which simply outputs the name of the Specification that ran:

This is a Report for ${data.info.description.className}

As you can see, you can use ${variable} to run actual code whose result will be printed in the report. Another way to do this, is to use <% code %> blocks, as in the following example, which prints the name and result of all features in a Specification:

<%
    features.forEach { name, result, blocks, iterations, params ->
%>
Feature Name: $name
Result: $result
<%
    }
%>

You probably noticed that some variables are available to be used in code in the template file.

These variables are the following:

  • data: an instance of SpecData containing the result of running a Specification.
  • reportCreator: the TemplateReportCreator instance.
  • features: as shown above, an Object which has a forEach method which can be used to iterate over all features of a Specification.

As the default template file shows, you can get statistics for the Specification easily with this code snippet:

<% def stats = com.athaydes.spockframework.report.util.Utils.stats( data ) %>
Report statistics: $stats

stats is a Map containing the following keys:

failures, errors, skipped, totalRuns, successRate, time

So, you can use it in your template like this, for example:

Total number of runs:   ${stats.totalRuns}
Success rate:           ${stats.successRate}
Number of failures:     ${stats.failures}
Number of errors:       ${stats.errors}
Number of ignored:      ${stats.skipped}
Total time (ms):        ${stats.time}

Created on ${new Date()} by ${System.properties['user.name']}

Summary template

The summary template has access to a single variable called data. This is a Map containing all the available data for all Specifications that have been run.

For example, after running two Specifications called test.FirstSpec and test.SecondSpec, the data Map could look like this:

[ test.FirstSpec: [ failures: 1, errors: 0, skipped: 0, totalRuns: 1, successRate: 0.0, time: 159],
  test.SecondSpec: [ failures: 0, errors: 1, skipped: 0, totalRuns: 3, successRate: 0.6666666666666666, time: 8 ] ]

You can then iterate over each Spec data as follows:

<% data.each { name, map ->
 %>| $name | ${map.totalRuns} | ${map.failures} | ${map.errors} | ${map.skipped} | ${map.successRate} | ${map.time} |
<% }
 %>

Check the default summary template for a full example.

Submitting pull requests

Please submit pull requests with bug fixes at any time!!

But if your Pull Request is about a new feature, please make sure to create an issue first so that we can all discuss whether it's a good idea and what's the best way to go about it.

Also, please notice that the master branch is supposed to contain only releases... the development branch is called next, so all PRs should be submitted against next, not master.

Recommend Projects

  • React photo React

    A declarative, efficient, and flexible JavaScript library for building user interfaces.

  • Vue.js photo Vue.js

    ๐Ÿ–– Vue.js is a progressive, incrementally-adoptable JavaScript framework for building UI on the web.

  • Typescript photo Typescript

    TypeScript is a superset of JavaScript that compiles to clean JavaScript output.

  • TensorFlow photo TensorFlow

    An Open Source Machine Learning Framework for Everyone

  • Django photo Django

    The Web framework for perfectionists with deadlines.

  • D3 photo D3

    Bring data to life with SVG, Canvas and HTML. ๐Ÿ“Š๐Ÿ“ˆ๐ŸŽ‰

Recommend Topics

  • javascript

    JavaScript (JS) is a lightweight interpreted programming language with first-class functions.

  • web

    Some thing interesting about web. New door for the world.

  • server

    A server is a program made to process requests and deliver data to clients.

  • Machine learning

    Machine learning is a way of modeling and interpreting data that allows a piece of software to respond intelligently.

  • Game

    Some thing interesting about game, make everyone happy.

Recommend Org

  • Facebook photo Facebook

    We are working to build community through open source technology. NB: members must have two-factor auth.

  • Microsoft photo Microsoft

    Open source projects and samples from Microsoft.

  • Google photo Google

    Google โค๏ธ Open Source for everyone.

  • D3 photo D3

    Data-Driven Documents codes.